META — PAGE ABOUT AGPEDIA

Agpedia Scope

Agpedia documents human knowledge in service of human agency. It is secular, truth-seeking, and methodical, and it aims to make evidence, methods, and value judgments explicit.

What belongs

What does not belong

How we decide

Standalone articles and notability

When a topic warrants its own article

A topic warrants a standalone article if it can be described, sourced, and updated independently — meaning it has enough to say on its own and a reader might reasonably look it up directly.

Notability

Agpedia does not apply Wikipedia's strict notability standard, which requires significant coverage in multiple independent sources. The bar here is lower, reflecting Agpedia's broader mission and the lower cost of creating well-sourced articles.

A topic is notable enough for a standalone Agpedia article if at least one reliable source treats it as a named, distinct thing worth describing. The source need not provide in-depth coverage — it must simply acknowledge the topic as something nameable and describable in its own right. This rules out topics that have no external reference, exist only in passing as part of something else, or have not been named or distinguished by any source.

Some categories carry a presumption of notability:

When notability is genuinely unclear, the default is to include rather than exclude, and to document the uncertainty in the article itself.

Agpedia’s scope is intentionally open-ended. As methods improve and new needs emerge, scope may expand, but changes must be documented and justified in terms of evidence, methods, and human agency.